Kegstand
FNG
Micro fiber towel and a paper towel
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I also would never use a paper towel. I watch people ruin their prescription glasses all the time using them.I
I would also never use a paper towel on my scope lenses but that is just me paranoid of scratching or dulling the lenses.
……I would in an emergency scenario for a quick shot if it was all I had though. Lol.
Takes a long time to dry soaked neoprene too if you are hunting multiple days in a rowI do butler creeks with tape. As Steve said above, once you open them you run the risk of humidity and fogging. I tried the neoprene covers for a few seasons, but actually I found my lenses were consistently more foggy. The scope overall was not wet but the humidity was thoroughly trapped in. Sort of part of the deal for those of us hunting on the coast/PNW.
I’m running the aadland covers for the first time. Always used butler creek caps but decided to go high end on the maven. They worked great only complaint is they are loud when the flip open!
For me in the pouring rain the scope only gets uncovered if it’s a buck. If I see deer I only use the Binos, cause once that thing is wet… even at hundreds of yards you can usually visually see a buck naked eye
I love the idea of the Butler Creek flip up caps, but I had enough trouble with them breaking that I went to a neoprene cover. If there is an aluminum or more durable version of the flip up caps, I would be game to try them again.Taped up butler creeks. Just assume that they are good for one use per day, as soon as they get wet, you better not close them until they are 100% dry!
This is also where the swfa's are nice. As the objective lens is set back a bit farther than most scopes. Does a good job at keeping the rain out while carrying in hand.
I'll keep the caps closed up until I think I might need to make a shot, then pop the front cap. I'll only pop the rear cap if the gun is getting shouldered.
I was thinking the same damn thing! Although the blacktail didn’t seem to care the other dayThey are loud. I was going to try a sticky felt pad thing that is used on the bottom of decorations for furniture… I am a retard right now and can’t think…
But the plan was to stick those on the caps where they hit the scope in the flipped position to hopefully dull the sound. I just need to remember to get some and try it out.
I ended up reading through this tread and saw some positive reviews for the Aadland caps, so I bought a set for each of my swfa 3-15 scopes. They were pricy, but if they don’t break it will be worth it to me.Ive heard of folks breaking them. Cant say I ever have had a problem with them. Have some sets that are 10+ years old..
Will say that this last batch I bought are a lil on the janky side.
I eventually treat all my gear like crap but have a tendency to baby things until they get a few dings.You are more cautious than I am![]()
I have a set I bought back in the 90’s that still work great.Ive heard of folks breaking them. Cant say I ever have had a problem with them. Have some sets that are 10+ years old..
Will say that this last batch I bought are a lil on the janky side.
Report back once you've tried them out. My nightforce caps nights as well have been open with how much water they let on this season.I saw these mentioned in a similar thread recently and I will be trying them next year
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Try the Vortex ones taped on.
A bit of a tangent, but what about binos/spotting scopes in the rain? At a certain point they become effectively useless. I would be curious to hear if anyone has tips or tricks beyond constant attention with a microfiber cloth. Simple enough to keep the lenses on your rifle scope dry with good caps, not so much so with the other optics.
works great with snow as well.I just run old Bushnell Elites from Japan with Rainguard (hydrophobic coating that repels water). Rainguard doesn't keep them dry, really, but it makes it so you can see enough to get off a shot through wet lenses. Also helps a lot with fog from breathing on the lens while waiting for the shot. It's kind of like permanent RainX.
Bushnell isn't the only company that uses hydrophobic coatings, but the old LOW made Elites are pretty solid set-and-forget scopes, and I've owned them for years.
I’m going to try this for binos next year, i will figure out a way to attach to my pack, i think it will work as long as its not blowing too hard https://www.sixmoondesigns.com/products/silver-shadow-carbon-umbrellaA bit of a tangent, but what about binos/spotting scopes in the rain? At a certain point they become effectively useless. I would be curious to hear if anyone has tips or tricks beyond constant attention with a microfiber cloth. Simple enough to keep the lenses on your rifle scope dry with good caps, not so much so with the other optics.